Beautiful bike and very nice to see him smiling after the ordeal.
Agreed, spending time with Rick must be an ordeal
Beautiful bike and very nice to see him smiling after the ordeal.
Agreed, spending time with Rick must be an ordeal![]()

Main thing is Andy is ok ! Good rider (gets lost as does Rick), top bloke I'd ride with Andy anytime.
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Main thing is Andy is ok ! Good rider (gets lost as does Rick), top bloke I'd ride with Andy anytime.
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I've read a bit of this thread. Some quite good comments, some very novicey type iam rubbish.
Reason for the crash? Rider error pure and simple. Not leaning with the bike at all and poor choice of line. Probably throttled off, suspension reduced travel and grounded. If he leant with the bike there would have been no problem.
Sat nav on- rear diff problem- oil on road??? Please!!
This is what happened....
Matey steaming in, severe lean angle as corner radius tightens up mid turn, grounds engine casing (which is the big black centre line).... loses front wheel, bike spins slowly into a broadside while skipping along the road. Job done.
Left hand scrape is Handlebar as it moves about. Right hand scrape is rear tyre tread scuffing.
Does that make you special or does it just make you feel special?I'm IAM Advanced and agree with you.
Does that make you special or does it just make you feel special?
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What test?Failed the test again, eh?![]()
Does that make you special or does it just make you feel special?

Whatever the main and contributing causes of this particular 'off', one thing is clear: on the road or track, your body position should be such that it allows the bike to be as upright as possible for maximum adhesion. If you stay more upright, the bike has to lean over further to compensate at the same speed, pushing the limits of the tyres and decreasing the margin before something solid touches down. Neither of these things are positive whether in steady state, under braking or under acceleration. Whilst they may help, neither traction control nor ABS Pro can change the laws of physics.
We will probably never know exactly what happened here but, whatever the cause(s) of this 'off' (catastrophic loss of control is never 'just one of those things'), we can all examine our cornering technique to ensure we're working with our bike and not against it. It's an I'll wind, etc.
Actually the tyre has a bigger contact area and thus more grip lean't over than in the upright position